[EM] (MA-1) A medium of communicative assent
Raph Frank
raphfrk at gmail.com
Wed Sep 24 07:39:49 PDT 2008
On 9/24/08, Michael Allan <mike at zelea.com> wrote:
> True, the translation barrier (from open to secret ballots) is another
> protection. It's partial. On its own, it cannot protect an open vote
> from purchase for its signalling value (like a paid endorsement, or a
> meeting stuffed with a paid audience). And it cannot protect norms,
> which are acted on by a different pathway. The fallback defence for
> these is recasting.
Right, it is like currently, where control of the nomination process
is powerful, even if it doesn't control the voters.
> You are thinking of using approval/range voting to provide an
> indicator of compromise *paths*? Interesting. It might be useful,
> especially for norms. Knowing that 2 candidate norms A and B *shared*
> assent (many approving of both) would reveal an opportunity to create
> a variant C that somehow combined the content of A and B. Assent
> might then shift to C. (It need not be a "compromise" document,
> technically speaking. If A and B are mutually compatible, then C
> might be purely an aggregate.)
True.
Also, lower level clients could approve multiple proxies. The end
result might be that to many proposals are approved.
> It might be less useful for official elections, like for executives.
> The only way to "combine" executive candidates A and B would be for
> them to vote for each other as a team. Usually a team cannot occupy a
> single office. They occupy a power structure, usually with a clear
> chain of command.
Well, candidate C might be the compromise.
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